One other thing to think about:

It might be useful to construct a rule such that any emails coming to
the old SMTP address either goes to a special folder, or pops up a
notification, or in some other way lets the person know that their old
address is being used, so that it can be corrected.

Kurt

On Tue, Jun 15, 2010 at 17:03, Brian Dwyer <bwdw...@bigpond.net.au> wrote:
> Create a new email address for brenda jones and make it the primary, leave 
> the brenda smith email address.  if mail is sent to brenda smith it will be 
> delivered .
> ---- Murray Freeman <mfree...@alanet.org> wrote:
>> Well, all the remarks so far are right on, but, what's with the name
>> change anyway. I understand that people get married, but in the case of
>> women, nearly all women that I know who have married since becoming a
>> member of working society, want to keep their maiden names, mostly to
>> prevent confusion. Of course, if a women wants to use her married name,
>> then she had better get the word out to all her contacts to eliminate
>> confusion. My daughter uses her maiden name for work and her married
>> name for all other purposes. I'm aware of women who ultimately were
>> divorced and then had issues because they wanted to resume their maiden
>> name, and caused confusion. Then of course there are hypenated last
>> names. Ah well, it's good to be a man, no name issues.....unless there's
>> a gender change!! LOL
>>
>> Murray
>>
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: David McSpadden [mailto:dav...@imcu.com]
>> Sent: Tuesday, June 15, 2010 1:20 PM
>> To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
>> Subject: Change name?
>>
>> Ok, we are about to go live with Exchange 2003 as our internet email
>> server.  The question came up today if a user gets married/divorced and
>> changes their name how will they get their email.  Since
>> brenda.sm...@host.com will get changed to brenda.jo...@host.com the
>> customer that sends brenda.sm...@host.com will get an NDR?? Correct??
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>


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